No she didn't. She is petty and impulsive. Her intentions were not as bad as some actual terrorists but she was playing the part.You can't do this do my girl Jelly E. Fish :c
She deserved to be happy.
Disagree. The SALF aren't terrorists. They're a small-time activist group using risky but ultimately nonviolent civil disobedience tactics (paint & paintball stunts). Their only apparent goal is to attract public attention to information the government & JMT are covering up. Meanwhile, all the real violence in the series is instigated by the JMT. And even petty, impulsive people deserve to be happy.No she didn't. She is petty and impulsive. Her intentions were not as bad as some actual terrorists but she was playing the part.
There's two things that should've been addressed thought: where did she get the money for the operations (though she gave little) and how the heroes department is going to fall for their foul play, if ever.
I think you changed my mind, if the judge was fairer they would have been more lenient with her. Maybe domiciliary arrest would have been best? In any case, good catch with the ending, it'd be nice to have a sequel.Disagree. The SALF aren't terrorists. They're a small-time activist group using risky but ultimately nonviolent civil disobedience tactics (paint & paintball stunts). Their only apparent goal is to attract public attention to information the government & JMT are covering up. Meanwhile, all the real violence in the series is instigated by the JMT. And even petty, impulsive people deserve to be happy.
I didn't love this ending, but I can accept it because the story is nonsense and exists only to facilitate brilliant art, absurd jokes, and gratuitous fanservice. Same with Prison School and its ending ending, which I actually preferred (especially the extended version). Speaking of which, the end of this series is an inverted version of Prison School's beginning. Kind of clever, I thought.
9/10